Pakistan eyes 60% clean energy by 2030, PM Imran Khan tells UN climate change summit.

ISLAMABAD -- Prime Minister Imran Khan on Saturday told the United Nations' climate change summit that Pakistan eyes 60% clean energy by 2030, in its bid to mitigate the effects of climate change.

Addressing the summit, the premier said that 30% of all the country's vehicles will run on electricity in the near future.

"I assure you that Pakistan will be doing its best to make its contribution to mitigate the effects of climate change," the premier said.

"Pakistan is the country whose contribution to global emission is less than 1%, yet and sadly, we are the fifth most vulnerable country to climate change," PM Imran Khan said.

The prime minister, explaining what Pakistan had decided to do about climate change, said that the country has decided to opt for "nature-based solutions" to mitigate the effects.

First, Pakistan will plant 10 billion trees in the next three years. Secondly, we have increased the number of national parks and protected areas from 30 to 45.

At the same time, we have decided that we will not have power based on coal. "We have already scrapped two coal power projects that were supposed to produce 2,600MW energy."

The premier apprised the forum that Pakistan had replaced the project through hydroelectricity.

As far as Pakistan's indigenous coal goes, the premier said the country had decided to produce energy, either by coal to liquid or coal to gas so that coal does not burn to generate power.

The summit marks the fifth anniversary of the Paris Agreement.

At the summit, it is expected that the countries will set out new ambitious commitments under three pillars of the Paris Agreement, namely mitigation, adaptation and finance.

The United Kingdom was to host this year's UN's...

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